B2 SPORTS East Oregonian Heppner’s Wilson, W-M’s Hoffman unanimous picks in Blue Mountain Conference By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian Heppner sopho- more Sydney Wilson and Weston-McEwen junior Stockton Hoffman were unanimous picks by the coaches for the Blue Moun- tain Conference teams. Wilson and Grant Union twins Hailie and Kaylee Wright were unan- imous picks on the girls team, while sophomore Keegan Glenn of Union joined Hoffman on the boys team. Wilson, a forward, averaged 22.5 points, 9.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists per game for the Mustangs. Hoffman, a 6-foot-1 guard, averaged 23 points, 9.5 rebounds and six assists per game for the TigerScots (4-19). The Heppner boys (18- 7), who won the BMC reg- ular-season title and the district title, had seniors Trent Smith and Tyler Car- ter named to the first team. The No. 8-ranked Mus- tangs will host Kennedy at 6 p.m. Friday in a first- round state playoff game. The winner will advance to the state tour- nament Feb. 28-March 2 at the Pendleton Convention Center and Pendleton High School. Also on the first team were senior Elias Esquivel of Stanfield, and junior Tristan Morris of Grant Union. The Grant Union girls won the BMC regular-sea- son title with an 11-2 record, but Heppner (18- 8) won the district title with a 62-57 win over the Prospectors. The No.6-ranked Mus- BLUE MOUNTAIN CONFERENCE SELECTIONS Boys First Team Keegan Glenn, so., Union (Unanimous); Stockton Hoff- man, jr., Weston-McEwen (Unanimous); Trent Smith, sr., Heppner; Elias Esquivel, sr., Stanfield; Tyler Carter, sr., Hep- pner; Tristan Morris, jr., Grant Union. Second Team Tanner Elliot, sr., Grant Union; Devin Greer, jr., Enter- prise; Jacob Vaughan, sr., Grant Union; Dylan Marr , sr., Enterprise; Theo White, fr., Weston-McEwen Honorable Mention Hugo Hernandez, sr., Stan- field; Tate Lantis, sr., Union, Riley Waggoner, so., Pilot Rock; Hunter Nichols, sr., Heppner; Justin McAninch, sr., Heppner. Girls First Team Hailie Wright , sr., Grant Union (Unanimous); Kaylee Wright, sr., Grant Union (Unanimous); Sydney Wilson, so., Heppner (Unanimous); Shelby Moncrief, sr., Enterprise; Katie Vescio, sr., Weston-McEwen; Jacee Currin, sr., Heppner. Second Team Callie Glenn, sr., Union; Kendra Hart, jr., Stanfield; Karli Bedard, sr., Enterprise; Madi McKrola, sr., Grant Union; Lexi Gassett, sr., Enterprise; Nyah Tejeda, jr., Stanfield. Honorable Mention Kait Evans, sr., Pilot Rock; Grace Austin, sr., Pilot Rock; Kylie Mar- riott, so., Union. tangs (18-8) will host San- tiam at 2 p.m. Saturday in a first-round state playoff game. The winner will advance to the state tour- nament Feb. 28-March 2 at the Pendleton Convention Center and and Pendleton High School. Rounding out the first team were seniors Jacee Currin of Heppner, Katie Vescio of Weston-McE- wen and Shelby Moncrief of Enterprise. Alex: ‘I have to show I’m one of the best, or weed me out’ Continued from Page B1 170-pound district finals to Nyssa’s Adam Simp- son, is 39-2 going into the 3A state tournament. But being a No. 2 seed comes with challenges. Miranda-Walls will open the state tournament Friday against three-time state champion Dax Ben- nett of Harrisburg. Bennett, who has won titles at 132, 152, and last year at 182, dropped to 170 for the post- season this year. “I heard my draw, and the coaches and I checked him out a little bit,” Miran- da-Walls said. “It’s tough right off the bat. I get what I get. It’s my destiny to go out and win, or put up the best fight he’s had all season.” Should he get past Ben- nett, Simpson, the defend- ing state champion, is on the other side of the bracket. “That’s pretty much how it is,” Miranda-Walls said. “Everyone has credentials. I have to show I’m one of the best, or weed me out.” Bring it on Irrigon coach Jason Dunten made sure he put together a schedule this season that would chal- lenge his team, especially Miranda-Walls. “People have dodged him all year,” said Dunten, who is taking a school record nine wrestlers to state. “We have taken him all over the state to find someone worth wrestling. That’s why I think Alex is ready to take on everyone in the state, including Dax Bennett.” Miranda-Walls went undefeated at the Ore- gon Classic, and won the Mac-Hi Christmas tourna- ment, but there are a few moments that stand out more than others. He started to get noticed in late December after win- ning the Winter Cup at Hanford High School with a 3-2 decision over Ozious Harden of Reardan, who went on to place third at the 1B/2B Washington state tournament. After the tournament, he was 18-0, and the competi- tion just kept getting better. At the Farm City Invita- tional in Hermiston, Miran- da-Walls pinned his first three opponents in the first round before meeting up with Chiawana’s Victor Siva in the finals. Miran- da-Walls beat Silva 7-0. Silva went on to place fourth at the 4A Washing- ton state tournament. At the Culver Invita- tional, he beat Ridgeview’s Cole Jackson 15-5 in the 182-pound championship match. Jackson has quali- fied for the 5A Oregon state tournament. Miranda-Walls lost his first match of the sea- son Feb. 2 to Hon Rush of Baker/Powder Valley, a 6-4 decision at the Bank of Eastern Oregon Invitational in Heppner. All of which have pre- pared him for state. “This is my last hurrah as a high school wrestler,” Miranda-Walls said. “I’m serious out on the mat, but if I didn’t enjoy it, I wasted four years. I get to compete in a sport I love.” Which makes his brother happy. “I’m excited to go watch him at state,” Landeros said. “To be honest, I have never seen him wrestle. It’s all still pretty new to me.” What the future holds Miranda-Walls had got- ten serious interest from NAIA wrestling power Southern Oregon Univer- sity, and has been in com- munication with Raiders coach Mike Ritchey. With a dream of being a wrestling coach, Miran- da-Walls is leaning toward a degree in education. “The best coaches are the ones involved in their schools and community,” he said. Friday, February 22, 2019 Bucks: ‘When you break your routine, it’ll affect you on the court’ Continued from Page B1 “This was a game we knew we would probably win,” said coach Kevin Por- ter. “Those are the games that are the hardest to pre- pare yourself for.” Senior Sarah Scott opened the game with a bucket to put Pendleton out front, and 5 1/2 score- less minutes ensued before Eagles senior Haylee Baker grabbed a turnover to even things out. A basket with 0:05 left from freshman Muriel Hoisington kept the Bucks ahead 5-2. “I wouldn’t just call it a slow quarter — I’d call it a slow game,” Porter said. “I’m not sure if we were still recovering from the hang- over after Tuesday’s dou- ble overtime (against Rid- geview), but we were tired tonight.” Hoisington and soph- omores Josie Wilson and Natalie Neveau strung together six- and eight-point runs to give the Bucks a 21-7 lead at the half. The Eagles scrounged up just five points, including a trey from Baker. “I feel good for our defense, but bad for (Hood River),” Porter said of his team’s advantage. “They don’t have very many shoot- ers. It would have been easier for us to get some rebounds if they did.” Both teams endured a three-minute scoring Pendleton 5 16 7 11 — 39 Hood River Valley 2 5 1 10 — 18 PENDLETON — Hoisington 10, Bradt 6, Wilson 6, Scott 6, Neveau 6, Jenness 3, Spriet 2 HOOD RIVER VALLEY — Baker 14, Baker 3, McNerney 1 Staff photo by Kathy Aney Natalie Neveau, left, and Katie Bradt, of Pendleton, and Hood River’s Reese Leiblein and Molly Routson battle for a rebound Thursday at Warberg Court. drought in the third quarter before freshman Daisy Jen- ness got a point at the free throw line to give Pendle- ton a 20-point lead with 0:17 left. The Eagles’ sole point came from junior Kaitlyn McNerney’s free throw. “We were on defense for really long stretches of time,” said senior post Katie Bradt. “(Hood River) likes to move the ball outside, and we prefer to push it up the floor. That hurt us. When you break your routine, it’ll affect you on the court.” A 3-point play from Baker early in the fourth quarter put the Eagles in double digits, but Bradt responded with four straight points for a 22-point Bucks advantage. Baker ended Hood River’s game with back-to-back treys, and Scott drained another bucket with 0:21 seconds left. “Hood River is a pretty scrappy team,” Bradt said. “We didn’t show up with our best game tonight. We knew we stood a good chance against them, and with that in the back of our minds, it was hard to bring your- self into the gym ready for a dog fight, if there was going to be one. They drove a lot, but their shots weren’t fall- ing — that helped us when our defense was scrambling a little bit.” The Bucks (9-12, 4-2 IMC) got 10 points from Hoisington, and six each from Bradt, Neveau, Scott, and Wilson. Baker posted a game-high 14 points or the Eagles. With the win, Pendleton now moves forward in the winner’s bracket and trav- els to Ridgeview on Satur- day — a team they fell to in double overtime earlier this week. “It’s going to be anyone’s game,” Bradt said of Satur- day’s matchup. “(Ridgeview was) on fire on Tuesday. They were hitting 3s left and right. I want to see the same energy that we brought on Tuesday. If we play like that, I think we have a shot.” Nixyaawii’s Schimmel, Burns highlight OOL team By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian Nixyaawii’s Mick Schimmel and Tyasin Burns were selected to the Old Oregon League first team by the league’s coaches. The Golden Eagles (24- 2) won the OOL regu- lar-season title with a 12-0 record. They beat Joseph 54-42 in the district cham- pionship game, earning a first-round bye in the state playoffs. Nixyaawii will host St. Paul at 6 p.m. Friday in a state playoff game. The winner will advance to the 1A state tournament Feb. OLD OREGON LEAGUE Girls First Team Sabrina Albee, so., Joseph; Made- lyn Nelson, jr., Joseph; Emma Hite, sr., Joseph; Megan Bingham, sr., Powder Valley; Caysie McGinness, sr., Imbler; Tymra Anderson, jr., Elgin. Second Team Haley Miller, sr., Joseph; Belle Blair, so., Powder Valley; Logan Nedrow, sr., Powder Valley; Jocelyn Palmer, so., Elgin; Lark Moses, jr., Nixyaawii; Ermia Butler, sr., Nixyaawii. Honorable Mention Camille Crenshaw, jr., Joseph; Autumn Davis, jr., Powder Valley; Ari- anna Krol, sr., Griswold; Riley Ferre, sr., Wallowa; Jamie Johnston, jr., Wal- lowa; Austin Kendall, jr., Cove; Mag- gie Frisch, fr., Cove; Maddie Morgan, 27-March 2 at Baker High School. jr., Pine Eagle. Boys First Team Christopher Nobles, sr., Wallowa; Mick Schimmel, jr., Nixyaawii; Tyasin Burns, so., Nixyaawii; Omar Benitez, sr., Powder Valley; Tyler Homan, sr., Joseph; Mason Ferre, so., Joseph. Second Team Jayce Burnett, jr., Imbler; Kaden McClure, so., Elgin; Tucker Gulick, sr., Pine Eagle; Deven Barkley, sr., Nixy- aawii; Eli Sprenger, so., Griswold; Moses Moses, so., Nixyaawii. Honorable Mention Quamah Picard, jr., Nixyaawii; Chase Murray, so., Joseph; Roper Bingham, fr., Powder Valley; Blake Witten, sr., Cove; Reese Dixon, fr., Powder Valley; Gage McKay, so., Elgin. Joining Schimmel and Burns on the first team are Omar Benitez of Powder Valley, Tyler Homan and Mason Ferre of Joseph, and Christopher Nobles of Wal- lowa, who was named OOL MVP. Eli Sprenger, of Gris- wold, was selected to the second team. Moses Moses and Deven Barkley, both of Nixyaawii, were also selected to the second team. For the girls, Joseph sophomore Sabrina Albee was named league MVP. Ermia Butler and Lark Moses, both of Nixyaawii, were selected to the sec- ond team. Arianna Krol, of Griswold, was named to the honorable mention team. PREP ROUNDUP Ione girls no match for Joseph in 1A state playoffs East Oregonian The 1A state playoff matchup on Wednesday wasn’t a pretty one for the Ione girls. The Cardinals ended their season with a 62-24 defeat to the 1A’s No. 2 team Joseph in the tournament’s first round. “They have a relentless press,” coach Nathan Heide- man said of Joseph. “They’re really long and really quick. We’re young {span}— we’re mostly freshmen and soph- omores. But I thought we played as good as we could have against a team like that. The girls worked their tails off all the way through, and as a coach, I couldn’t be more proud.” Sophomore Jessica Medina poured in 10 points for the Cardinals (18-5, 12-1 BSL), and freshman Hailey Heideman added in eight. Ione ended at No. 3 in the Big Sky League stand- ings, and No. 17 in the 1A division. “(Joseph’s) coach gave me a really great compli- ment after the game,” said Heideman. “He said, ‘Next year, you guys are going to be the team to look out for.’ I couldn’t ask for anything more from my team tonight.” SCOREBOARD Chicago Cleveland LOCAL SLATE FRIDAY, FEB. 22 Boys Basketball Umatilla at Sutherlin, 5:30 p.m. Kennedy at Heppner, 6 p.m. Nixyaawii vs. St. Paul (at Pendleton High School), 6 p.m. Men’s Basketball Big Bend at Blue Mountain, 7:30 p.m. Women’s Basketball Big Bend at Blue Mountain, 5:30 p.m. Boys Wrestling Pendleton, Irrigon, Heppner/Ione, Echo/ Stanfield, Riverside at State Wrestling (Portland), 9 a.m. SATURDAY, FEB. 23 Boys Basketball Pendleton vs. The Dalles (at BMCC), 4 p.m. Girls Basketball Santiam at Heppner, 2 p.m. Pendleton at Ridgeview, 2:30 p.m. Boys Wrestling Pendleton, Irrigon, Heppner/Ione, Echo/ Stanfield, Riverside at State Wrestling (Portland), 9 a.m. NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Toronto Philadelphia Boston Brooklyn New York Southeast Charlotte Orlando Miami Washington Atlanta Central Milwaukee Indiana Detroit W 43 38 37 30 11 W 27 27 26 24 19 W 44 38 26 L 16 21 22 30 47 L 30 32 31 34 39 L 14 20 30 Pct .729 .644 .627 .500 .190 Pct .474 .458 .456 .414 .328 Pct .759 .655 .464 GB — 5 6 13½ 31½ GB — 1 1 3½ 8½ GB — 6 17 14 13 44 46 .241 .220 30 31½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest W L Pct Houston 33 24 .579 San Antonio 33 26 .559 Dallas 26 31 .456 New Orleans 26 33 .441 Memphis 23 36 .390 Northwest W L Pct Denver 39 18 .684 Oklahoma City 37 20 .649 Portland 35 23 .603 Utah 32 25 .561 Minnesota 27 30 .474 Pacific W L Pct Golden State 41 16 .719 L.A. Clippers 32 27 .542 Sacramento 30 27 .526 L.A. Lakers 28 29 .491 Phoenix 11 49 .183 ——— Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled. Thursday’s Games Cleveland 111, Phoenix 98 Philadelphia 106, Miami 102 Portland 113, Brooklyn 99 Milwaukee 98, Boston 97 Friday’s Games Chicago at Orlando, 4 p.m. New Orleans at Indiana, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Toronto, 4 p.m. Washington at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Detroit at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at New York, 4:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 5 p.m. Denver at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Utah at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Portland at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Brooklyn at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Indiana at Washington, 4 p.m. L.A. Lakers at New Orleans, 4 p.m. Memphis at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Phoenix at Atlanta, 4 p.m. GB — 1 7 8 11 GB — 2 4½ 7 12 GB — 10 11 13 31½ Detroit at Miami, 4:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Houston at Golden State, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at Utah, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Orlando at Toronto, 12:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Denver, 2 p.m. San Antonio at New York, 4:30 p.m. NHL Conference Glance EASTERN GP W Tampa Bay 62 47 Boston 61 36 N.Y. Islanders 60 35 Toronto 60 36 Washington 61 34 Montreal 61 33 Pittsburgh 61 32 Carolina 61 32 Columbus 59 33 Buffalo 60 28 Philadelphia 61 28 Florida 59 26 N.Y. Rangers 60 26 New Jersey 61 24 Detroit 61 23 Ottawa 60 22 WESTERN GP W Calgary 60 37 San Jose 61 36 Nashville 63 36 Winnipeg 60 36 St. Louis 60 32 Vegas 62 32 Dallas 60 30 Minnesota 61 28 Colorado 60 25 Chicago 61 26 Arizona 60 27 Vancouver 60 26 Anaheim 60 24 Edmonton 60 25 Los Angeles 60 23 L OT Pts GF GA 11 4 98 244 163 17 8 80 184 157 18 7 77 174 146 20 4 76 210 170 20 7 75 205 193 21 7 73 184 177 22 7 71 210 191 23 6 70 178 170 23 3 69 188 180 24 8 64 171 187 26 7 63 179 206 25 8 60 184 203 26 8 60 173 199 29 8 56 180 208 29 9 55 172 204 33 5 49 186 223 L OT Pts GF GA 16 7 81 221 178 17 8 80 223 190 22 5 77 193 164 20 4 76 203 178 23 5 69 179 169 25 5 69 182 175 25 5 65 153 156 27 6 62 168 181 24 11 61 196 193 26 9 61 205 227 28 5 59 157 174 27 7 59 170 188 27 9 57 137 187 29 6 56 169 201 31 6 52 144 184 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division and two wild cards per confer- ence advance to playoffs. Wednesday’s Games Chicago 5, Detroit 4, OT Colorado 7, Winnipeg 1 Calgary 4, N.Y. Islanders 2 Boston 3, Vegas 2, SO Thursday’s Games Washington 3, Toronto 2 New Jersey 4, Ottawa 0 Carolina 4, Florida 3 San Jose 4, Pittsburgh 0 Minnesota 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Tampa Bay 2, Buffalo 1, SO Montreal 5, Philadelphia 1 Nashville 2, Los Angeles 1 Dallas 5, St. Louis 2 Edmonton 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, OT Friday’s Games Columbus at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Colorado at Chicago, 4:30 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 6 p.m. Winnipeg at Vegas, 7 p.m. Saturday’s Games New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 10 a.m. Washington at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Boston at St. Louis, 1 p.m. Carolina at Dallas, 2 p.m. Los Angeles at Florida, 2 p.m. San Jose at Columbus, 2 p.m. Colorado at Nashville, 2:30 p.m. Montreal at Toronto, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh vs. Philadelphia at Philadel- phia, Pa., 5 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 9:30 a.m. San Jose at Detroit, 12 p.m. Dallas at Chicago, 12 p.m. St. Louis at Minnesota, 4 p.m. Calgary at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Arizona, 6 p.m.